Pages

Readers

Since my blog has moved, I can no longer use Bloggers "Follower" gadget. If you are a part of NetWorked blogs, which includes a Facebook page, you can follow through NetworkedBlogs, and I can follow you back. Please come to my new blog - MaggiesNotebook.com, see the NetworkedBlogs widget in the right sidebar and click follow. I will follow back.

Elie Wiesel

"I learned that in extreme situations when human lives and dignity are at state, neutrality is a sin. It helps the killers, not the victims." Elie Wiesel, Holocaust Survivor who lost his family in the Holocaust - Nobel Prize Author

Socialism - Liberalism Quotation

"The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism, but under the name of liberalism they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program until one day America will be a socialist nation without ever knowing how it happened."–Norman Thomas

American socialist, 1948

Sunday, February 14, 2010

President Obama has achieved little in his first year on the big issues facing the country: the Environment, Energy and the Economy. His political capital is as non-existent as Martha Coakley's seat in the Senate, so he plans to issue executive orders to make things happen.

U.S. Constitution - Crisis and Emergency

Obama hopes to enact some his cap and trade legislation through executive order. There is no emergency to be dealt with within cap and trade, although Democrats find it profitable to be the Saviors of a dying earth. Nevertheless, the President will try to strike down the will of the people.

Most executive orders throughout history have "war" or "national
security" behind them, but not all. The quote below from Cornell Law says these powers are available to a president "in times of emergency,"
but we certainly see that most president's have taken advantage of the
powers without much discretion.

Executive Orders

In times of emergency, the president can override congress and issue
executive orders with almost limitless power. Abraham Lincoln used an
executive order in order to fight the Civil War, Woodrow Wilson issued
one in order to arm the United States just before it entered World War
I, and Franklin Roosevelt approved Japanese internment camps during
World War II with an executive order. Many other executive orders are
on file and could be enacted at any time.

The following is identified as U.S. Supreme Court decisions, although I'm not sure about this intro into the article:

Presidential emergency powers should be distinguished into two
categories, even though the boundary between them is sometimes obscure:

(1) the power to act in a crisis based entirely on the president's own
prerogative; and

(2) the power to act in accordance with laws that give the
executive special powers in a declared emergency.

The latter is a
long‐standing feature of American law; the former is, from the
standpoint of constitutional theory, more problematic.

Barack Obama has already unleashed a number of executive powers to further his environmental policies. He has ordered that the Feds set a 2020 greenhouse gas emission reduction target by by January 5, 2009, reduce fleet petroleum consumption, conserve water; reduce waste, support sustainable communities, and leverage Federal purchasing power to promote environmentally-responsible products and technologies.

None of the above promote a crisis or an emergency, and "supporting sustainable communities" simply takes your money and mine and piles it on the green industry. What department manager cannot "conserve water" without an executive order?" And if we are going to promote "environmentally-responsible products and technologies," let the American people know how much the deficit grew because of these mandated policies. Why did we not stop this executive order? You'll find a list of Obama's Executive orders for 2009 here.

Note that we seem to have "Greening the Government" (as Clinton's was titled) executive order from every modern day president.

Over the years, we have clearly redefined the definition of "crisis" and "emergency."

There
is no provision in the text of the Constitution that the president has
special power to act on his or her own discretion in an emergency. It
is sometimes argued that such power can be inferred from the Vesting
Clause (“the executive Power shall be vested in a President of the
United States of America”) and from the president's oath of office (“I
will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States,
and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution of the United States”)—the only oath that is
constitutionally prescribed.

In recent years, Bill Clinton used executive privilege, assuring his environmental legacy by designating millions of acres of land as national monuments, illegally done under the Antiquities Act, which calls for "the smallest area compatible" with care and management. Of the 5.6M acres grabbed by Clinton, one alone was 1.7M acres. Use of the land becomes then restricted: grazing, mining and timber harvesting come to a halt - even though the land is still privately owned.

Former President
Bill Clinton proudly publicized his use of executive decrees in
situations where he failed to achieve a legislative objective.
Moreover, he repeatedly flaunted his executive order power to curry
favor with narrow or partisan special interests. If this were not
enough, Clinton's top White House political advisers made public
statements about his use of executive decrees that were designed to
incite a partisan response, saying, for example, that the power was
"cool" and promising that he would wield that power to the very end of
his term....

History will show
that President Clinton abused his authority in a variety of ways and
that his disrespect for the rule of law was unprecedented.

Presidential executive orders can be stopped through legislation or the courts:

...if the President
attempts to issue an order regarding a matter that is expressly
committed to another branch of government; it might even render the
presidential action void.

One example is Bill Clinton's "striker replacement," where he tried to convince Congress to enact a prohibition against employers hiring permanent replacements for striking workers - in direct opposition to the National Labor Relations Act. Congress refused, and Clinton signed Executive Order 12954 to make it law. The U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C. unanimously over-turned the Order

The court first
determined that it had jurisdiction over the case despite what the
court described as President Clinton's "breathtakingly broad claim of
non-reviewability of presidential actions." In short, the court said
that it did not have to defer to the President's claim that he was
acting pursuant to lawful authority under the Procurement Act. On the
merits, the court ruled that since the NLRA "undoubtedly" grants an
employer the right to hire permanent replacements for striking workers,

The job of the president is to be our Commander in Chief, Head of State, Chief Law Enforcement Officer and Head of the Executive Branch, so we should think about how our energy policy, directed only by Barack Obama, comes under authority. Is there any lawful action, he alone can take, on energy policy that is Constitutional?

Today, we find ourselves in the position of accepting questionable executive powers without questioning them, simply because it has gone on in other administrations. Barack Obama pounded G. W. Bush on the campaign trail for his use of executive powers, but once he stepped into the Oval Office, that rhetoric ceased.

There may be close
cases in which the validity of the executive order is uncertain, such
as when a claim of inherent constitutional authority is arguable and
where Congress has been silent or its will is unclear....

Although the number
of illegal executive orders issued by President Clinton does not
constitute a large percentage of his total of 364, the pattern of
illegal orders, often without any claim of statutory or constitutional
authority, is still striking.

Presidential executive orders, in general, receive little attention. It is time to reign-in the Oval Office and define "crisis" and "emergency," to preserve the shreds of our Constitution - one shred at a time.

"One of the prettiest sounds on earth" is the Muslim call to prayer at sunset.

Memeorandum

Sitemeter

StatCounter

Fair Use Statement

FAIR USE: This blog may contain copyrighted material, the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner or may be authorized or licensed for publication at this site only. Permission to copy, republish or reproduce such material must be obtained from the original copyright owner.

Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Important Notice

Patrons of this Blog are advised that they will be held responsible for any unlawful, harassing, libelous, abusive, threatening, or harmful material of any kind or nature posted by their respective ISP. Patrons are cautioned not to transmit via comments, including links to any material that encourages conduct that could constitute a criminal offense, give rise to civil liability, or otherwise violate any applicable local, state, national or international law or regulation. Comments here are typically unmoderated and unedited. The fact that particular comments remain on the site in no way constitutes the site owner's endorsement of commenters' views.